The grenadier company of a line infantry battalion was paraded on the right of the line, the place of honour accorded to its status. |
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Most of the other marines had taken up positions in barracks or in the cratered remains of bunkers destroyed by their grenadier. |
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When some of the water is removed from the grenadier, its flesh becomes firm, and the meat flaky, says Crapo. |
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Tonight, he will host a dinner at Buckingham Palace in his role of Colonel of the grenadier Guards. |
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The abyssal grenadier has a liver that can store enough food to keep it going for 186 days if needs be. |
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The governess is saved by the intervention of a grenadier who dares to break down the doors of her apartments. |
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By-catches of roundnose grenadier and black scabbard to be counted against this quota. |
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Led by Colonel Phillips, it included one grenadier company and nine fusilier companies, in all 33 officers and 400 soldiers. |
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The grenadier of the 40th at right is shown in full marching order. He also wears the brown marching gaiters that were used on active service. |
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The Pacific slope-dwelling grenadier respires at one hundredth the rate of its distant relative, the Atlantic cod. |
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Chancellor Bismarck once famously remarked that the whole of the Balkans were not worth the bones of a single Pomeranian grenadier. |
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These are the grenadier fish and the emperor fish which are minor contributors to diet, but data showed the lower level was unachievable. |
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There are now either limited or no fisheries for squid, plaice, redfish, witch, haddock, hake, pollock, roundnose grenadier, and capelin. |
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He was a radio telephone operator, grenadier and machine gun operator. |
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In others living and feeding near the bottom, such as the grenadier, the light organs presumably warn off predators or signal to mates. Because food is scarce, many animals grow slowly and live a long time. |
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The 'Louisbourg Grenadiers' was a temporary unit formed in 1759 for the Quebec expedition from the grenadier companies of three regiments that were stayed behind as part of the British garrison of Louisbourg. |
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It claimed catching orange roughy, roundnose grenadier, Portuguese dogfish and the leafscale gulper shark should be halted. |
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Researchers say Architeuthis eats other types of squid and grenadier, a species of fish that lives in the deep ocean. |
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An important commercial fishery exists for the larger species, such as the giant grenadier and Coryphaenoides rupestris. |
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I served in the Grenadier Guards and was on duty at Windsor many times and saw her on several occasions. |
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He volunteered for the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1938 and was seconded to the Grenadier Guards, seeing action at Dunkirk and D Day. |
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In early 1942 she was appointed Colonel-in-Chief of the Grenadier Guards, at sixteen she carried out her first public engagement, when she inspected the regiment. |
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Two Grenadier guardsmen from the Windsor barracks will be in full scarlet uniform, complete with trademark bearskin headgear. |
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In 1841 he entered the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, followed by a commission in the Grenadier Guards where he developed a special interest in musketry. |
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As usual, the ceremonial of the Nijmegen Company Grenadier Guards, who formed the Guard of Honour in scarlet tunics and black bearskins, was immaculate. |
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The photo in your story shows a Grenadier guard wearing a bearskin. |
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Utah Beach was in the area defended by two battalions of the 919th Grenadier Regiment. |
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Whilst the first casualty was, as you remark, a Grenadier Guard, you omit to mention the 17 Afghan civilians blown up by misaimed rockets. |
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They skirmished throughout the day with elements of the 919th Grenadier Regiment, who were armed with antitank guns and rifles. |
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Thus, if only the infantry is represented, the Royal Marines would parade before the Grenadier Guards, the senior infantry regiment of the Army. |
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Promoted to lieutenant on 30 January 1915, he soon transferred to the Grenadier Guards. |
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The 25-year-old helped comrades in the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards advance by firing an antitank missile when he was shot in south Aghanistan. |
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Lord John, the third son of the fourth Duke of Buccleuch, was a Grenadier Guards officer and MP for Roxburghshire. |
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Macmillan served in the Grenadier Guards during the First World War. |
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Scipio, from which the regimental slow march of the British Grenadier Guards is derived, was performed as a stopgap, waiting for the arrival of Faustina Bordoni. |
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In 1943, at the age of 16, Elizabeth undertook her first solo public appearance on a visit to the Grenadier Guards, of which she had been appointed colonel the previous year. |
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